1over137 wrote:Byblos wrote:1over137 wrote:Byblos wrote:
What I meant is the exact opposite, that only an expanding universe can yield all those anthropic conditions (and that the probability of that happening is virtual infinity to 1 for any type of universe and any form of life).
Then, how expanding universe yields low entropy principle?
And THAT is the mystery of it all Hana. This should not have happened. Every conceivable odds say this could not have happened. Penrose calculates the probability at 10^10^123 which is virtual infinity to 1 and yet that is exactly what we see in our universe. It seems to me it all comes down to a matter of belief. Either one must believe in impossible odds or one must believe in an intelligent acting agent. One belief system is rational and the other one isn't. That's the bottom line.
I do not think this is called low entropy principle. What you said now is probability of universe in which life is, or not? What this has to do with expanding universe? What this has to do with entropy?
Let me try to put it in a different order, maybe this will explain better what I'm trying to say:
What are the necessary conditions for life to be possible?
1) Low entropy is needed, without which there can be no life because disorder produces nothing but disorder. According to Penrose, the probability of low entropy is virtual infinity to 1.
2) Units of complexity and constant laws of interaction
3) Constant universal values
Those are the conditions necessary for any kind of life to even be possible. But how do those conditions come about and in what type of universes might we expect to see all those conditions all at once? The answer is in an expanding universe. So the conditions necessary for life to be possible cannot even begin to exist unless we start with an expanding universe.
Now if you disagree with this, then you're postulating that a non-expanding (static) universe can in fact have all those anthropic conditions all at once. And that's what I asked you to explain because I don't see how that's even possible. How can you have low entropy in a static universe? How can you have gravity, galaxy formation, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd generations of stars where the building blocks of the periodic table are formed one generation after another from the simple to the more complex (you see that? simple to more complex, i.e. complexification towards higher order activity)? Is this all possible in a static universe? Every literature I've read on the subject says no.